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Bombay High Court Remands Appeals to Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) [CIT(A)] in Transponder Royalty Dispute: “Absence of Foundational Facts and Agreement Analysis Makes All Orders Non-Speaking”

Bombay High Court Remands Appeals to Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) [CIT(A)] in Transponder Royalty Dispute: “Absence of Foundational Facts and Agreement Analysis Makes All Orders Non-Speaking”

Bombay High Court Remands Appeals to Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) [CIT(A)] in Transponder Royalty Dispute: “Absence of Foundational Facts and Agreement Analysis Makes All Orders Non-Speaking”

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Court’s Decision

The Bombay High Court remanded a series of connected Income Tax Appeals to the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) [CIT(A)] for fresh adjudication. The appeals revolved around whether payments made by the appellant to Intelsat Corporation (USA) for transponder services constitute “royalty” under Section 9(1)(vi) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 and/or Article 12(3) of the India-USA Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA).

The Court held that:

“There is an absence of foundational facts in the orders of all the three authorities… The orders are non-speaking orders.”

Accordingly, the matter has been remanded to the CIT(A) with a specific timeline to dispose of the matter by 31 December 2025 and with directions to undertake a detailed factual determination on the nature of services rendered and their classification under Indian tax law and the treaty.


Facts


Issues

  1. Whether payments made for transponder services are assessable as “royalty” under Section 9(1)(vi) and/or Article 12(3) of the India-USA DTAA?
  2. Can retrospective amendments (Explanations 5 and 6 to Section 9(1)(vi)) be read into treaty provisions?
  3. Whether tax is deductible at source under Section 195 even if the payee (Intelsat Corp) is not liable to pay tax in India?

Petitioner’s Arguments


Respondent’s Arguments


Analysis of the Law


Precedent Analysis


Court’s Reasoning

“Any exercise by this Court on the factual determination… would set a wrong precedent and would be contrary to Section 260A.”


Conclusion

The High Court remanded the matters to the CIT(A) with the following directions:

  1. If there is a final determination that Intelsat Corp. is not liable to tax on these payments, then the appellant cannot be held liable to deduct tax at source.
  2. For payments made prior to the Finance Act, 2012, no withholding tax liability shall arise due to retrospective amendments.
  3. For payments made post-2012, CIT(A) must examine the nature of the services and determine if they fall within the definition of “royalty” under domestic law or the treaty.
  4. All contentions are kept open, and parties are free to rely on precedents during remand proceedings.

Implications


Also Read – Supreme Court Sets Aside Delhi HC Ruling on Arbitral Interest Award — Affirms Tribunal’s Power to Award Varying Interest Rates for Subdivided Periods and on Total Sum Including Pre-Award Interest

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